Monday, October 5, 2009

07

CHAPTER 7
Katherine Solomon hurried across the parking lot through the cold rain, wishing she had worn more than
jeans and a cashmere sweater. As she neared the building’s main entrance, the roar of the giant air purifiers
got louder. She barely heard them, her ears still ringing from the phone call she’d just received.
That which your brother believes is hidden in D.C. . . . it can be found.
Katherine found the notion almost impossible to believe. She and the caller still had much to discuss and had
agreed to do so later that evening.
Reaching the main doors, she felt the same sense of excitement she always felt upon entering the gargantuan
building. Nobody knows this place is here.
The sign on the door announced:
SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM
SUPPORT CENTER
(SMSC)
The Smithsonian Institution, despite having more than a dozen massive museums on the National Mall, had a
collection so huge that only 2 percent of it could be on display at any one time. The other 98 percent of the
collection had to be stored somewhere. And that somewhere . . . was here.
Not surprisingly, this building was home to an astonishingly diverse array of artifacts—giant Buddhas,
handwritten codices, poisoned darts from New Guinea, jewel-encrusted knives, a kayak made of baleen.
Equally mind-boggling were the building’s natural treasures—plesiosaur skeletons, a priceless meteorite
collection, a giant squid, even a collection of elephant skulls brought back from an African safari by Teddy
Roosevelt.
But none of this was why the Smithsonian secretary, Peter Solomon, had introduced his sister to the SMSC
three years ago. He had brought her to this place not to behold scientific marvels, but rather to create them.
And that was exactly what Katherine had been doing.
Deep within this building, in the darkness of the most remote recesses, was a small scientific laboratory
unlike any other in the world. The recent breakthroughs Katherine had made here in the field of Noetic
Science had ramifications across every discipline—from physics, to history, to philosophy, to religion. Soon
everything will change, she thought.
As Katherine entered the lobby, the front desk guard quickly stashed his radio and yanked the earplugs from
his ears. “Ms. Solomon!” He smiled broadly.
“Redskins?”
He blushed, looking guilty. “Pregame.”
She smiled. “I won’t tell.” She walked to the metal detector and emptied her pockets. When she slid the gold
Cartier watch from her wrist, she felt the usual pang of sadness. The timepiece had been a gift from her
mother for Katherine’s eighteenth birthday. Almost ten years had now passed since her mother had died
violently . . . passing away in Katherine’s arms.
“So, Ms. Solomon?” the guard whispered jokingly. “Are you ever gonna tell anybody what you’re doing
back there?”
She glanced up. “Someday, Kyle. Not tonight.”
“Come on,” he pressed. “A secret lab . . . in a secret museum? You must be doing something cool.”
Miles beyond cool, Katherine thought as she collected her things. The truth was that Katherine was doing
science so advanced that it no longer even resembled science.

No comments:

Post a Comment